One Way Street And Other Writings Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
One Way Street And Other Writings One Way Street And Other Writings by Walter Benjamin
2,210 ratings, 3.96 average rating, 255 reviews
One Way Street And Other Writings Quotes Showing 1-26 of 26
“Work on a good piece of writing proceeds on three levels: a musical one, where it is composed; an architectural one, where it is constructed; and finally, a textile one, where it is woven.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“All the decisive blows are struck left-handed.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“What, in the end, makes advertisements superior to criticism? Not what the moving red neon says—but the fiery pool reflecting it in the asphalt.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“to great writers, finished works weigh lighter than those fragments on which they labor their entire lives.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“In a love affair, most seek an eternal homeland. Others, but very few, eternal voyaging. These latter are melancholics, for whom contact with mother earth is to be shunned. They seek the person who will keep far from them the homeland’s sadness. To that person, they remain faithful.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“Genuine polemics approach a book as lovingly as a cannibal spices a baby.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“The power of a country road is different when one is walking along it from when one is flying over it by aeroplane.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“Like a clock of life on which the seconds race, the page number hangs over the characters in a novel. Where is the reader who has not once lifted to it a fleeting, fearful glance?”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“The child seeks his way along the half-hidden paths. Reading, he covers his ears; the book is on a table that is far too high, and one hand is always on the page. To him, the hero’s adventures can still be read in the swirling letters like figures and messages in drifting snowflakes. His breath is part of the air of the events narrated, and all the participants breathe it. He mingles with the characters far more closely than grown-ups do. He is unspeakably touched by the deeds, the words that are exchanged; and, when he gets up, he is covered over and over by the snow of his reading.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“We have long forgotten the ritual by which the house of our life was erected.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
tags: life
“Quotations in my work are like wayside robbers who leap out armed and relieve the stroller of his convictions.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“The language of nature is comparable to a secret password that each sentry passes to the next in his own language, but the meaning of the password is the sentry’s language itself.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“Nature creates similarities. One need only think of mimicry. The highest capacity for producing similarities, however, is man’s. His gift in seeing resemblances is nothing other than a rudiment of the powerful compulsion in former times to become and behave like something else. Perhaps there is none of his higher functions in which his memetic faculty does not play a decisive role.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“The camera is getting smaller and smaller, ever readier to capture fleeting and secret moments whose images paralyse the associative mechanisms in the beholder.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
tags: camera
“The expressions of those moving about a picture gallery show ill-concealed disappointment that they only find pictures there.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“Our feeling, dazzled, flutters like a flock of birds in the woman’s radiance. And as birds seek refuge in the leafy recesses of a tree, feelings escape into the shaded wrinkles, the awkward movements and inconspicuous blemishes of the body we love, where they can lie low in safety.”
Walter Benjamin, One-Way Street
“Тот, кто пытается узнать будущее у гадалок, сам того не ведая, поступается внутренней вестью о грядущем, которая в тысячу раз точнее всего, что он может от них услышать. Им движет скорее леность, чем любопытство, и нет ничего ближе покорной тупости, с которой он узнает свою судьбу, чем опасная, проворная хватка этого смельчака, который стяжает будущее. Ибо основа будущего заключена в духовном настоящем; точно подметить, что происходит в данную секунду, куда важнее, чем знать наперед дальнейшее. Предзнаменования, предчувствия, знаки денно и нощно, словно волны, прокатываются сквозь наш организм.”
Walter Benjamin, Улица с односторонним движением
“Convencer es infructuoso.”
Walter Benjamin , One Way Street And Other Writings
“Ser feliz significa poder tomar conciencia de uno mismo sin llevarse un susto.”
Walter Benjamin, Calle de sentido único (Serie menor nº 4)
“A child in his nightshirt cannot be prevailed upon to greet an arriving visitor.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“He who cannot take sides should keep silent.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“Gifts must affect the receiver to the point of shock.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
tags: gifts
“The destructive character knows only one watchword: make room; only one activity: clearing away.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“To read what was never written.’ Such reading is the most ancient: reading before all languages, from the entrails, the stars, or dances. Later the mediating link of a new kind of reading, of runes and hieroglyphs, came into use.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“It is true that countless facades of the city stand exactly as they stood in my childhood. Yet I do not encounter my childhood in their contemplation. My gaze has brushed them too often since, too often they have been in the décor and theatre of my walks and concerns.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings
“Bir insanı ancak onu ümitsizce seven tanır.”
Walter Benjamin, One Way Street And Other Writings